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ray gives us the story. that's what makes it so powerful. it's a story of resilience, sacrifice, and ultimately success. it's a story of america. and there is perhaps no better person than ray to wrinl it. you will know him for the national correspondent for "newshour" and npr "talk of the nation." and the interviewer tbeeched on the mesh -- americas last may he interviewed anthony kennedy in one of the most thought-provoking rule of law issue in the hemisphere i have ever heard. i have to say that my assignment today as the interviewer of an interviewer -- [laughter] is a little bit like going one on one with michael jordan. i'm looking forward to the experience. he's a prolific author. -- he's received numerous awards for his groundbreaking awards in journalism. you have his expanded biography, if you care to look tat. ladies and gentlemen, would you please join me in welcoming ray suarez. [applause] >>> i want to get to the story you told, ray, on the latino experience in the united states. as i join you here before we do. i want to explo
ray gives us the story. that's what makes it so powerful. it's a story of resilience, sacrifice, and ultimately success. it's a story of america. and there is perhaps no better person than ray to wrinl it. you will know him for the national correspondent for "newshour" and npr "talk of the nation." and the interviewer tbeeched on the mesh -- americas last may he interviewed anthony kennedy in one of the most thought-provoking rule of law issue in the hemisphere i have ever...
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to all of us. so i think that's -- it's not that, you know, generations just fell asleep. i mean, i think there's an aggressive assault to foreclose those possibilities and foreclose people seeing them, seeing the possibility of fighting the inevitable. i hope that answers your question. >> it does. [applause] it did, it does. i hope that one of you ladies will get around to giving us a biography on claudia jones who was deported -- >> yeah. >> she settled this england, but -- in england, but she is of that period. >> absolutely. >> a truly epic woman. >> no, i mean -- >> in terms of her confronting the government and what was taking place. and one so rarely hears about her or any reference to her during the black history month, that one month that captures our -- >> everything. >> our lives. but i hope that someone someday gives this dear lady some justice. >> well, i recommend there's a book by a woman named carol boys davies which is actually about claudia jones, and it's the first book-length b
to all of us. so i think that's -- it's not that, you know, generations just fell asleep. i mean, i think there's an aggressive assault to foreclose those possibilities and foreclose people seeing them, seeing the possibility of fighting the inevitable. i hope that answers your question. >> it does. [applause] it did, it does. i hope that one of you ladies will get around to giving us a biography on claudia jones who was deported -- >> yeah. >> she settled this england, but --...
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and i think i knit us a toilet at one point. [laughter] so we live in a scrapped-together but pleasant basement. and run the cafÉ out of the second story and the bookstore out of the first, and that's the reason we were able to offer kelly that arrangement where we didn't charge her rent. we wanted the community to have this cafÉ. and, you know, we're not stupid. we don't want to pay for having a cafÉ. but we had a very gentle profit-sharing agreement for that. so the first advice is don't pay rent. the second advice is don't open a bookstore if you just love books and you don't love people. you will kill someone, and you will go to jail for it. [laughter] third advice, don't open a bookstore if you're afraid of spiders if you're flying solo, because every box of books that comes into you will have a spider in it. you need a partner who is not afraid of spiders. and if you've got a partner who can kill spiders, if you're not paying rent and you like people, you're going to be fine. you have to be smart. you have to start smal
and i think i knit us a toilet at one point. [laughter] so we live in a scrapped-together but pleasant basement. and run the cafÉ out of the second story and the bookstore out of the first, and that's the reason we were able to offer kelly that arrangement where we didn't charge her rent. we wanted the community to have this cafÉ. and, you know, we're not stupid. we don't want to pay for having a cafÉ. but we had a very gentle profit-sharing agreement for that. so the first advice is don't...
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he's always working with us. so the bookstore is -- i like to say that we work on keeping it alphabetized. my husband likes to say that we are a treasure-trove where you make incredible discoveries every day, and that's because we're so disorganized. i told you about opening the second story cafÉ. that's actually their signature dish, the french toast with sea salt caramel sauce on top, and it's a famous seller. that's kelly in the corner there. i think one of the neatest things we've ever been able to do as a bookstore in our community is provide a need to the community because we had a beloved restaurant called the mutual. it was in a pharmacy, and a chain pharmacy bought the local pharmacy out and closed the restaurant. i mean, they weren't evil, they just needed to do it for their own balance and their own planning. but it wasn't a good move for the community. now, the man who runs that chain for the region lives in our community, and he's a nice man and a good member of the community. but we lost our restau
he's always working with us. so the bookstore is -- i like to say that we work on keeping it alphabetized. my husband likes to say that we are a treasure-trove where you make incredible discoveries every day, and that's because we're so disorganized. i told you about opening the second story cafÉ. that's actually their signature dish, the french toast with sea salt caramel sauce on top, and it's a famous seller. that's kelly in the corner there. i think one of the neatest things we've ever...
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tweet us your feedback we'd like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv. >>> chief correspondent of the "washington post" has a new book on the 2012 election. >> well, because i thought the election was a collision between a lot of things, two americas, the america that e elected president obama in 2008 and the america that elected the republicans to take com of the house in 2010. a collisions of philosophies, of ideology, and also a collision between two quite different permits and peoples in president obama and governor romney. you think about where each of them came from, they couldn't have been more different. >> was there a point where the winner of the collision could have been mitt romney? >> you could argue a year out the president was very vulnerable. in large part because it was not clear what was going happen with the economy. as we have played out the election, two i thinks. one, i think the president's campaign was more skill and more effective both in the consistency and the shaping of its message, and also just in its org
tweet us your feedback we'd like to hear from you. tweet us your feedback. twitter.com/booktv. >>> chief correspondent of the "washington post" has a new book on the 2012 election. >> well, because i thought the election was a collision between a lot of things, two americas, the america that e elected president obama in 2008 and the america that elected the republicans to take com of the house in 2010. a collisions of philosophies, of ideology, and also a collision...
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that theyorm a theme have not consistently used. but the thing that goes to the administration. >> the white house to medications operations, the book titled "managing the president's kumar.," with martha fromfascinating insights students at george mason, purdue university, and the washington center. also i will university. thank you very much. >> my pleasure. . .
that theyorm a theme have not consistently used. but the thing that goes to the administration. >> the white house to medications operations, the book titled "managing the president's kumar.," with martha fromfascinating insights students at george mason, purdue university, and the washington center. also i will university. thank you very much. >> my pleasure. . .
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we used to speak that way. we used to advocate policies that were like that. we used to nominate presidential candidates, and i hate to go back to it, but in a place like eureka. sink about this. think about this, john kasich. think who we nominated, we nominated a guy in 2012 whose dad ran a car company in the state of michigan. we nominated a guy in 2008 whose dad pretty much ran the united states navy during the 1960's. 2000 four and 2000, a guy whose dad was president. in 1992 and 1988, a guy whose father was the east coast establishment. i love all of them, i have great respect for all of them, but are we really sitting here wondering why we are not connecting to farmers and westcott -- texas and milkman in ohio9? >> franklin roosevelt was a very rich man. first of all, i know how i can get applause, end the stupid way we conduct presidential debates. that was the dumbest. >> hell yeah. >> let me tell you, you know rick called me up one year -- one day and said, what do you think? i haven't heard one thing about taxes. the debates got everybody off track.
we used to speak that way. we used to advocate policies that were like that. we used to nominate presidential candidates, and i hate to go back to it, but in a place like eureka. sink about this. think about this, john kasich. think who we nominated, we nominated a guy in 2012 whose dad ran a car company in the state of michigan. we nominated a guy in 2008 whose dad pretty much ran the united states navy during the 1960's. 2000 four and 2000, a guy whose dad was president. in 1992 and 1988, a...
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they are women just like us. they belong with us. when the movement was perceived by some as moving too quickly and they stood up and said if we continue to be this aggressive, we will start antagonizing man. she said men don't worry about antagonizing man, why should we? than the first world war start and they say this is no time for us to be pushing for this radical reform. we should take down the picketers outside the white house. alva stands up and says over my dead toddy. this is exactly the time we should be pushing for this radical reform. she'd make sure the pickets stayed up there until the end of the war. what happened? well, you can imagine she was roundly denounced and ostracized and pushed out of society. she was seen as this domineering , pictorial come egomaniacal woman who had barged into an organization and let him in radical past. the other thing that happened on august 18, 1920, the 19th amendment to the united states constitution was passed, giving women for the first time in american has read the right to vote. t
they are women just like us. they belong with us. when the movement was perceived by some as moving too quickly and they stood up and said if we continue to be this aggressive, we will start antagonizing man. she said men don't worry about antagonizing man, why should we? than the first world war start and they say this is no time for us to be pushing for this radical reform. we should take down the picketers outside the white house. alva stands up and says over my dead toddy. this is exactly...
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don't ask us, don't come after us, don't regulate us. were not going to care. conservatives will be happy with that. liberals attack conservatives because government is the business. government is what is right. the growth of government is in and of itself an inherent good because rights don't spring from god will broberg view. the government gives you rights. your rights come from a vast government that is decided which are allowed to do and not allowed to do. it's a hop cd of what constitutes right is supposed to the john locke view. natural rights to protect. government gives you rights because of the government would dare come to be other. the left has a very almost self-contradictory view of human nature. on one hand if the government weren't there, we'd all be a bunch of racist murder each others. on the other hand, humanity is eminently protectable and we can all be turned into perfect human beings. the right has a clear view of human nature because it's biblically sound, which is human beings have the capacity for good and evil. sometimes good, sometime
don't ask us, don't come after us, don't regulate us. were not going to care. conservatives will be happy with that. liberals attack conservatives because government is the business. government is what is right. the growth of government is in and of itself an inherent good because rights don't spring from god will broberg view. the government gives you rights. your rights come from a vast government that is decided which are allowed to do and not allowed to do. it's a hop cd of what constitutes...
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one using at the time. and so was interesting to me is a danger we expect her to be experiencing in the 1940s, she doesn't expect it so much in the 1940s. or use of that language and her engagement of us networks come back to haunt her later on with the rise of mccarthy and it becomes danger. what becomes dangerous is what you said, with whom you affiliated yourself in the past, more so than the kind of actual danger and a moment to sort the political danger that you can look back and says who did you know and when did he know them and how did you know them, and were going to stop her mobility not because you said those things and did those things in the past. but that doesn't take away from the courage she displayed during that period. >> good evening. i have a question. i was just startled when he spoke about how these women were actually very celebrate in the time and it's kind of a tragic moment to think that we've lost them so speak because these are women who are celebrated in the same way that artist
one using at the time. and so was interesting to me is a danger we expect her to be experiencing in the 1940s, she doesn't expect it so much in the 1940s. or use of that language and her engagement of us networks come back to haunt her later on with the rise of mccarthy and it becomes danger. what becomes dangerous is what you said, with whom you affiliated yourself in the past, more so than the kind of actual danger and a moment to sort the political danger that you can look back and says who...
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but reminds us these terms down to the cause we don't want to be disturbed and if you disturb us come you broken the covenant. these terms are controversial. i think again sometimes some people are trying to debunk the myth, they tell you something you thought was of greater importance is not as greater importance he thought. my purpose is opposite to say it's even more important to say what happens here says the terms for an unfolding debate that we have appreciated. yeah. [inaudible] >> yes, yes. [inaudible] >> i think that's right. really for me, the most surprising discovery of all was et al., with web relish the anti-republican democrats, those copperheads just adopted the confederate bob things. it just shows you how the instant impulse to politicize this. my argument if there is never a moment in which northerners and not celebrate grants victory and not very moment when confederates en masse are southerners lament please defeat. it's political from the very start. this has to do them part with the price. what did the traces his followers and here come the campaign, meeting of
but reminds us these terms down to the cause we don't want to be disturbed and if you disturb us come you broken the covenant. these terms are controversial. i think again sometimes some people are trying to debunk the myth, they tell you something you thought was of greater importance is not as greater importance he thought. my purpose is opposite to say it's even more important to say what happens here says the terms for an unfolding debate that we have appreciated. yeah. [inaudible] >>...
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the women asked, what can it mean, what is going to happen to us? wives, children, husbands, all were overcome by english and emotion. the wives come to the arms of their husbands with children seeing and others weeping and started to cry as well. most of the men resorted to a kafir to discuss the practical issue of how the artist was to be gutted. then the the young and even the not so young boarded the trains and went to join the army's. winston churchill wrote after it was all over cannot know part of the great work in pairs and interest with its opening, the measured, sunland, drawing together a gigantic forces, the uncertainty of their movements and positions, the number of unknown and unknowable facts made the first collision a drama never surpassed, nor was there any of their time in the war and the general battle was waged on so greater scale, the slaughter was so swift with the stakes so high. moreover, and the beginning our faculty is a wonder, or, and excitement, not authorized and didn't mind the years. all this was said, the view of his
the women asked, what can it mean, what is going to happen to us? wives, children, husbands, all were overcome by english and emotion. the wives come to the arms of their husbands with children seeing and others weeping and started to cry as well. most of the men resorted to a kafir to discuss the practical issue of how the artist was to be gutted. then the the young and even the not so young boarded the trains and went to join the army's. winston churchill wrote after it was all over cannot...
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it used to be that those of us in the middle who sought lauded for our efforts. now it seems we are vilified. >> just in the last minute or so we have left, here are the big questions when it comes to women's leadership. hillary clinton, you democratic women senators all signed this highly secretive letter that we all know about -- >> nothing is sacred anymore. -- encouraging hillary to run for president. >> our people are very excited about the possibility of her running. there is no surprise. we all signed the letter, including elizabeth, asking elizabeth to run. >> is this just a acclamation, ? >> emocratic primary act go >> there is a lot of positive support. >> so if she doesn't run, then amy klobuchar runs for you notice she is traveling all over. ? >> thank you very much. >> coming up on c-span, a look at sugar policy in the u.s.. "washington journal" begins live a.m. >> c-span, we bring public affairs events from washington directly to you. putting you in the room at congressional hearings, white house events, briefings and conferences at offering complet
it used to be that those of us in the middle who sought lauded for our efforts. now it seems we are vilified. >> just in the last minute or so we have left, here are the big questions when it comes to women's leadership. hillary clinton, you democratic women senators all signed this highly secretive letter that we all know about -- >> nothing is sacred anymore. -- encouraging hillary to run for president. >> our people are very excited about the possibility of her running....
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i'm going to use an expletive deleted here. and mickey said well, johnny stomp and not go has been expletive deleted. sinatra said to me, i want you to get into stuff. i said me quite she was your wife. you are the man, you do it. he said he never did. i didn't know who stomp anonymous until a year or two later when lana turner's daughter stabbed him. >> guest: how i wish i had maggio when i was doing this sinatra book. i believe every word of that. based on information and belief in all of the research i have done, true story. >> host: hotted frank sinatra get involved in politics and why did he go from jfk to ronald reagan? >> guest: well, his mother, his mother who is euphemistically called the midwife in hoboken. she did abortions and she also delivered babies. but she terminated a lot of pregnancies. that's very controversial at that time. it was a very catholic 12 square block area. she was a big democrat and she was part of the democratic machine. so he grew up as a democrat. and he was very much for harry truman. he cla
i'm going to use an expletive deleted here. and mickey said well, johnny stomp and not go has been expletive deleted. sinatra said to me, i want you to get into stuff. i said me quite she was your wife. you are the man, you do it. he said he never did. i didn't know who stomp anonymous until a year or two later when lana turner's daughter stabbed him. >> guest: how i wish i had maggio when i was doing this sinatra book. i believe every word of that. based on information and belief in all...
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[laughter] i can remember clearly when was dawning us this is just way beyond us. and the fact is that, you know, that's a moment that comes to 90% of the people who set off on the appalachian trail intending to hike it and end. 90% of them don't make it. most of them get a little further before they realize what utter failures they are. [laughter] for several days. i didn't dwell on it in the book. for several days i was quite gloomy and disrespondent about this. i thought i have to hike it. i promised publishers i would deliver a book. and in interviews i announced i'm hiking the appalachian trail. so i sort of publicly committed to it. i a book contract in the back pocket. my sense of failure was really profound. believe me. and yet, you know, i also realized simultaneously with all of that i'm not going to do it. i can't do. it's not the physical side of it. which is hard enough but it's the mental side of it. and the idea can you go this? can you be separate for your family for five months. put up with the sort of endless repetition and the kind of roughing it
[laughter] i can remember clearly when was dawning us this is just way beyond us. and the fact is that, you know, that's a moment that comes to 90% of the people who set off on the appalachian trail intending to hike it and end. 90% of them don't make it. most of them get a little further before they realize what utter failures they are. [laughter] for several days. i didn't dwell on it in the book. for several days i was quite gloomy and disrespondent about this. i thought i have to hike it. i...
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i don't use the term lightly. they were yelling at me. why it was an absolute requirement there be a literacy test for voting. i said, you know, i understand why you say that. i also think of my grandfather, who came here in 1951 worked like a dog for the remaining 50 years of his life, probably wept to the third grade, if that, and i think he spoke a kind of english. my wife tell me he didn't really speak english. [laughter] and the idea that he would not be able to vote after president mckinley and the cabinet decide they want puerto rico to be part of the united states without asking anybody that live there had. that 100 years later be able to tell my grandfather he can't vote seems problematic to me. if you go throughout in to the world, and united sphriewt building railroads and picking governments and causing the downfall of over governments and so on. you ought to expect a little bit of historical and social blowback. it's not a cost three proposition in the modern world. there we are. [inaudible] [laughter] >> thank you for puttin
i don't use the term lightly. they were yelling at me. why it was an absolute requirement there be a literacy test for voting. i said, you know, i understand why you say that. i also think of my grandfather, who came here in 1951 worked like a dog for the remaining 50 years of his life, probably wept to the third grade, if that, and i think he spoke a kind of english. my wife tell me he didn't really speak english. [laughter] and the idea that he would not be able to vote after president...
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they are women just like us. they belong with us. and when the movement was perceived as moving too quickly. many stood up and said we will start antagonizing men if we continue to be this aggressive. and she said men don't worry about antagonizing others why should we. and then the world war i started and some women said this isn't a time to picket. and she said over my dead body. this is exactly the time we should be pushing for the radical reform. what happened to alba? well, you can imagine. she was denounced and seen as a domineering woman who barged in the an organization and led it on a radical path. the other thing that happened on august 18th, 1820 the 19th amendment was passed giving women the right to to vote for the first time in american history. and the lesson of the victory is as pertiannaepertinent today as now. and that is if you deny people they will come back and defeat you. alba dies in the spring of 1933 from a stroke and her funeral is at the same church where her daughter was married so many years ago. ... aven
they are women just like us. they belong with us. and when the movement was perceived as moving too quickly. many stood up and said we will start antagonizing men if we continue to be this aggressive. and she said men don't worry about antagonizing others why should we. and then the world war i started and some women said this isn't a time to picket. and she said over my dead body. this is exactly the time we should be pushing for the radical reform. what happened to alba? well, you can...
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history will prove us right. if years have passed and i would like to think that history has proved us right. but i'm enough of a realist to know that 50 years from now we will have another panel. [laughter] and most of us won't be here. so i think that once we can help investigation and say that the commission ignored this, dr. childs in his book said that the commission ignored the testimony of a deaf mute the testified that he saw a person with a rifle behind a white picket fence should a president. now, who can ignore the testimony of a deaf mute? i ask you. >> but he didn't say that backing for it. and when people went to the place where he saw what he saw, it was evident that he came back with another theory in the 1970s and the 1980s and i think that particular failure commission was impossible because this allegation was not put forth at the time it was completed. >> i think that there is a possibility he should have interviewed witnesses deeper. green osborne, when asked if any public official was threat
history will prove us right. if years have passed and i would like to think that history has proved us right. but i'm enough of a realist to know that 50 years from now we will have another panel. [laughter] and most of us won't be here. so i think that once we can help investigation and say that the commission ignored this, dr. childs in his book said that the commission ignored the testimony of a deaf mute the testified that he saw a person with a rifle behind a white picket fence should a...
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, it just shouldn't be used. we should respect the dignity of every human being. >> host: could he tell us something about by your trust in that we may not know? >> guest: there's a great deal about him. he grew up in pennsylvania, he was early committed to the way of peace and the way of love and nonviolence. back in the late 40s he was doing something called the journey of reconciliation. it was similar to the freedom rides of 1961. early on, he was looked upon as a socialist. it he was smart and a wonderful organizer. he lead in organized labor and he was a fighter and a crusader for social justice. he was very hopeful and optimistic. he believed that somehow and someway we could truly build an integrated society, society where no one would be left out or left behind. he was a wonderful friend. >> host: was his homosexuality a big deal at the time? >> guest: i think that during the 60s that people within the movement, within the civil rights movement discriminated against him simply because he was gay. they di
, it just shouldn't be used. we should respect the dignity of every human being. >> host: could he tell us something about by your trust in that we may not know? >> guest: there's a great deal about him. he grew up in pennsylvania, he was early committed to the way of peace and the way of love and nonviolence. back in the late 40s he was doing something called the journey of reconciliation. it was similar to the freedom rides of 1961. early on, he was looked upon as a socialist. it...
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us with night sticks, trampling us with forces and releasing the tear gas. i was hit in the head with a nightstick and i had a concussion at the bridge. and i are member my legs going out from under me and falling to the ground. i thought it was the last protest, i thought i was going to die and i kept thinking about what was going to happen to the other people. i don't recall 48 years later how i made it across the bridge back to the streets of selma back to that little church that we left from, but i do recall being in the church was full to capacity more than 42,000 people on the outside trying to get into protest but someone said to say something, speak to the people and i stood up and i said i don't understand it a president johnson can send troops to vietnam and cannot send troops to selma to protect people's desires to register. the next thing i realized is i was at the hospital with 17 other people. early the next morning doctor martin luther king jr. and the reverend and his colleague came to selma and to the hospital to visit us and he told me that
us with night sticks, trampling us with forces and releasing the tear gas. i was hit in the head with a nightstick and i had a concussion at the bridge. and i are member my legs going out from under me and falling to the ground. i thought it was the last protest, i thought i was going to die and i kept thinking about what was going to happen to the other people. i don't recall 48 years later how i made it across the bridge back to the streets of selma back to that little church that we left...
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in violence against us. that was my first arrest the. and that day when i was arrested i felt so free. i felt liberated. i felt like i crossed over because growing up in rural alabama, when i asked my mother and my father, my grandparents, my great grandparents about segregation and racial discrimination, about those signs, white men, colored men, white women, colored women. and i said why? like what they would say that's the way it is. don't get in the way. don't get in trouble. but dr. king and rosa parks inspired me to get in trouble. so by sitting in, we were arrested and we went to jail. 89 of us were arrested on that day. >> host: did you pay a fine? were you in jail for a while? >> guest: we were in jail for a few hours. a matter of fact, the local school officials came down and bailed us out. that was my first arrest. that was my introduction to the southern jails. i tell people, i grew up sitting down on this lunch counter stools and going to jail in places like nashville and birmingham, jackson, mi
in violence against us. that was my first arrest the. and that day when i was arrested i felt so free. i felt liberated. i felt like i crossed over because growing up in rural alabama, when i asked my mother and my father, my grandparents, my great grandparents about segregation and racial discrimination, about those signs, white men, colored men, white women, colored women. and i said why? like what they would say that's the way it is. don't get in the way. don't get in trouble. but dr. king...
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into start us off. i want to ask you get any assignment forced to is anything -- >> i am very thankful, and i greatly appreciate the quietness of -- it has its own voice. i love it. >> money, to have a final thought? and thank you again on behalf of all of us are, on behalf of this fine institution, on behalf of politics and prose, all of your friends, and they are all your friends here. thank you so much for coming. the have a final thought? >> thanks to all of you. you're listening to me and you're also listening to the cause of education and that is really important for me. because i speak for education of every child in every corner of the world, the thing i noticed he when it came to uk for the second time, a few weeks ago -- spent america. what did i say? sorry. [laughter] when i came to america, there was in our meetings we had in her schedule we had to go to a school, and that school is just a few kilometers away from a tall buildings of new york. and when girls told me their stories of how hard
into start us off. i want to ask you get any assignment forced to is anything -- >> i am very thankful, and i greatly appreciate the quietness of -- it has its own voice. i love it. >> money, to have a final thought? and thank you again on behalf of all of us are, on behalf of this fine institution, on behalf of politics and prose, all of your friends, and they are all your friends here. thank you so much for coming. the have a final thought? >> thanks to all of you. you're...
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that is what is different about us. [applause] >> if you look at our political discourse, there is so much polarization. people are sure that they are right on both sides and our political discourse would be balanced by people like you, who see truth in both sides and people like you can build the bridges that we need. [applause] >> thank you. that was the right answer. >> thank you. we are coming to the end. >> all right. the question i have for you is, --know the lawyer was talking gloria was talkingabout operating at a macro and micro level at the same time. my personal level, something that i find difficult, what about what i want to see in the world and how to find my place, i trace the micro to the macro and he gets overwhelming to talk to tweak them and see where my place is where i can add leverage to operate at the micro level. i wonder if any of you have thoughts on that? >> the little picture is the building block. many philosophers have failed because they thought the end justifies the means. in fact, the me
that is what is different about us. [applause] >> if you look at our political discourse, there is so much polarization. people are sure that they are right on both sides and our political discourse would be balanced by people like you, who see truth in both sides and people like you can build the bridges that we need. [applause] >> thank you. that was the right answer. >> thank you. we are coming to the end. >> all right. the question i have for you is, --know the...
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what does that tell us? what it tells me is taken too far, a culture and communications environment of full disclosure may end up highlighting fact about individuals that deprive us of their services even though we would be well served to have those services. the culture of disclosure and act the government's price, not just morally distasteful. makes a real difference and not a positive one. >> thank you to the entire panel. tevi, congratulations on the book. appreciate your remarks about the michael bay movie showing fdr in a wheelchair, first-time michael day, the explode diaz director in hollywood responsible for the transformer movies has been praised for historical verisimilitude. so i am the editor of the new atlanta a journal of technology. i would like to focus on the technological aspects threaded through the remarks here. i wonder if looking forward, and i am not asking for technological projections into the future but looking forward, whether we might see any trend to continue the story, chris's
what does that tell us? what it tells me is taken too far, a culture and communications environment of full disclosure may end up highlighting fact about individuals that deprive us of their services even though we would be well served to have those services. the culture of disclosure and act the government's price, not just morally distasteful. makes a real difference and not a positive one. >> thank you to the entire panel. tevi, congratulations on the book. appreciate your remarks...
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while she greatly regrets she cannot be with us tonight, she sent us a video instead. please note that this video was taped before the events of the government shutdown. [laughter] >> good evening and thank you to the grimke event planning committee for inviting me to join you tonight. it is a great event and i wish i could be with you in person but we are going to have to settle for this video. i'm glad to be here to mark the 175th anniversary of angelina rimke's historic speech to the massachusetts general assembly and the 20,000 massachusetts women who joined her petition to end slavery. it is an incredible time to celebrate the legacy of courageous women in the abolitionist movement. their efforts grew into the fight for suffrage and for equal rights. this anniversary is also a reminder of the powerful impact we can have one we make our voices heard and we stand up for what we believe in. i never planned to get into politics. i spent pretty much my whole career as a teacher and as a law professor. i taught bankruptcy and did research on the economic squeeze on midd
while she greatly regrets she cannot be with us tonight, she sent us a video instead. please note that this video was taped before the events of the government shutdown. [laughter] >> good evening and thank you to the grimke event planning committee for inviting me to join you tonight. it is a great event and i wish i could be with you in person but we are going to have to settle for this video. i'm glad to be here to mark the 175th anniversary of angelina rimke's historic speech to the...
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Nov 28, 2013
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he's just using a different tone. by fighting the catholic church has shifted tremendously, not just on gay marriage but in general -- i think the catholic church has shifted tremendously, not just on gay marriage but in general. i think it shows you what one person can do when they choose to lead, when they choose to stop being judgmental, and when they lead by example and they lead with love, not with judgment. iran. it's an hour and 10 minutes. >> thank you for braving the weather and the pre-pre-holiday traffic to join us tonight or what i'm sure will be a fascinating discussion. before we begin, i would like to take a couple of minutes of your time to take -- to talk about some upcoming events and about the council year-end campaign, which begins next week. on december 4, the town so hosts dr. henry kissinger for a luncheon at the fairmont hotel. dr. kissinger's topic will be the a ship hit it -- asia pivot strategy. on december 4, the council's annual international .oliday affair we will be honoring the ambassad
he's just using a different tone. by fighting the catholic church has shifted tremendously, not just on gay marriage but in general -- i think the catholic church has shifted tremendously, not just on gay marriage but in general. i think it shows you what one person can do when they choose to lead, when they choose to stop being judgmental, and when they lead by example and they lead with love, not with judgment. iran. it's an hour and 10 minutes. >> thank you for braving the weather and...
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and so we're using research funds to prove this up, and you use it as an example that it's adequately demonstrated. that doesn't make sense to me. >> actually, we are coordinated closely with doe, and if you listened and heard from the doe folks today, you know they share our opinion about its availability and that it has been demonstrated, but it's exciting to think that we could make it more cost effective moving forward and expand the range of sequesteration opportunities, so they are actually working harold with the industry to continue to move technology forward. that is only good news, sir. that's not bad news. >> you don't know whether it's adequately demonstrated. >> the yes -- gentleman's time expired. thank you. pursuant to the discussion earlier about the sufficiency of the data provided by epa related to the committee's subpoena, i ask concept to enter into the record a letter from the committee received last week making clear, quote, that the data provided to date lacks information making it impossible to duplicate the findings was epa. without objection, it's a part of t
and so we're using research funds to prove this up, and you use it as an example that it's adequately demonstrated. that doesn't make sense to me. >> actually, we are coordinated closely with doe, and if you listened and heard from the doe folks today, you know they share our opinion about its availability and that it has been demonstrated, but it's exciting to think that we could make it more cost effective moving forward and expand the range of sequesteration opportunities, so they are...
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but," he said, "let us begin." today, in this moment of new resolve, i would say to all my fellow americans, let us continue. this is our challenge--not to hesitate, not twofold, not -- not to fold, not to linger over this evil moment, but to continue on our of course so that we may fulfill the destiny that history has set for us. our most immediate task are here on this hill. first, no memorial oration or eulogy could more eloquently honor president kennedy's memory then nearly as possible passage of the civil rights bill for which he fought so long. [applause] we have talked long enough in this country about equal rights. we have talked for a hundred years or more. it is time now to write the next and to write it in the books of law. [applause] i urge you again as i did in 1957 and again in 1960 two an act a civil rights law so that we can move forward to eliminate from this nation every trace of discrimination and oppression that is based upon race or color. [applause] there could be no greater source of strengt
but," he said, "let us begin." today, in this moment of new resolve, i would say to all my fellow americans, let us continue. this is our challenge--not to hesitate, not twofold, not -- not to fold, not to linger over this evil moment, but to continue on our of course so that we may fulfill the destiny that history has set for us. our most immediate task are here on this hill. first, no memorial oration or eulogy could more eloquently honor president kennedy's memory then nearly...
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us safe. are out.us on behalf of the oh thomas family, i want to wish everybody a very happy thanksgiving. tomorrow we will count ourselves to bethere is more thankful for that we can imagine. i want to grant popcorn a full .eprieve come on. we wish you well. we are going to give you a pardon. congratulations. happy thanksgiving, everybody. [applause] get out of the rain. >> the annual national menorah lighting ceremony took place at the white house. this marks the start of the jewish holiday, hanukkah, which overlaps with thanksgiving. >> happy hanukkah, everybody. good evening. celebrations is a of many in the hands of few. we are going to have to carry for allit of hanukkah of our friends who had ,ifficulty getting here .ncluding one of our cantors from one we make two. now we will have the united plus threeforce band cantors. bank the men and women of the air force and. -- i want to thank the men and women of the air force band. the greatest concern we have is for a peaceful future. with a
us safe. are out.us on behalf of the oh thomas family, i want to wish everybody a very happy thanksgiving. tomorrow we will count ourselves to bethere is more thankful for that we can imagine. i want to grant popcorn a full .eprieve come on. we wish you well. we are going to give you a pardon. congratulations. happy thanksgiving, everybody. [applause] get out of the rain. >> the annual national menorah lighting ceremony took place at the white house. this marks the start of the jewish...
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it's going take us longer. if we were in the deepest of deep holes in a state that followed a liberal democrat doctrine far decade. there's no tax you can't raise or create. and you can't raise it high enough to drive people out of your state. boston college did a study between you're and '08 in our state in the heart of the time a democratic govern mans. $70 billion in wealth left our state. you don't recover from that, jerry, like that. it's going to take awhile. i think look at my number and year five, six, seven they continue, i think, in the trajectory they are going in now. >> you expect to see real economic dividends? >> i do. and also, you can't everything is relative in comparison between the states. i expect us to continue to be more competitive. for instance a state like new york is moving in the wrong direction. you see taxes being increased there and you have a new mayor in new york aggressively talking about increasings taxes in new york city. come to new jersey. come true -- come through the tunn
it's going take us longer. if we were in the deepest of deep holes in a state that followed a liberal democrat doctrine far decade. there's no tax you can't raise or create. and you can't raise it high enough to drive people out of your state. boston college did a study between you're and '08 in our state in the heart of the time a democratic govern mans. $70 billion in wealth left our state. you don't recover from that, jerry, like that. it's going to take awhile. i think look at my number and...
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not because we are eager to use it, but because no one would ever dare to challenge us. i think reagan. it right when he said -- got it right when he said, as are the enemies of freedom, those who are potential adversaries, they will be reminded that peace is our highest aspiration. we will negotiate for it. we will sacrifice for it. but we will not surrender for it. now or ever. our forbearance should not be misunderstood, our reluctance for conflict should not be misjudged as a failure of will. when action is required to preserve our national security we will act. we will maintain sufficient strength to avail if need be knowing that if we do so we have the best chance of never having to use that strength. there is probably no clear or disposition of what it means to have peace through strength. for our countries -- country's sake, for our soldiers'sake for every veteran that ever fought for his country or her country america's mission should always be to keep the peace, not police the world. an america that does not seek to be involved in every conflict around the worl
not because we are eager to use it, but because no one would ever dare to challenge us. i think reagan. it right when he said -- got it right when he said, as are the enemies of freedom, those who are potential adversaries, they will be reminded that peace is our highest aspiration. we will negotiate for it. we will sacrifice for it. but we will not surrender for it. now or ever. our forbearance should not be misunderstood, our reluctance for conflict should not be misjudged as a failure of...
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there is a desire for us to be smart about how we use our power. there is a concern that if we begin to retrench and we appear that our dependence on our end up -- it is not a source of great reoccurrence -- reassurance to those in asia. one other point i want to throw out there, it is true putin has been playing effectively on the chessboard. i would also note that if the price of oil is high, that is good for putin and russia. particularly given their economic situation. if it is low, that is bad for putin and russia. you don't have an effective rule of law there because companies cannot know what they can repatriate him because the capacity to innovate and russia is not what it ought to be. in a time when we have increased by about 3 million barrels a day what we are adding to the global energy pool because of what we are doing with our own developments, one of the reasons the price of oil has been relatively stable at a time when there is a lot of disruption within the middle east and because with -- because of what our policy has been has been
there is a desire for us to be smart about how we use our power. there is a concern that if we begin to retrench and we appear that our dependence on our end up -- it is not a source of great reoccurrence -- reassurance to those in asia. one other point i want to throw out there, it is true putin has been playing effectively on the chessboard. i would also note that if the price of oil is high, that is good for putin and russia. particularly given their economic situation. if it is low, that is...
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so, each of us is the nail, and each of us can win the battle. thank you. [applause] , thank you. -- >> thank you. [applause] ayanna pressley is boston city council are at large. she is our next speaker. top of the to get the first go round and the top of the ticket in the preliminary elections for boston -- top of the ticket the first go round in the top of the ticket in the preliminary elections for boston. [applause] >> well, good evening. today, we commemorate this is audacioushe historian demonstration of our fellow sister, angelina grimke, who went boldly before the general court in 1838 to proclaim, "i stand before you as a citizen." today, we pay tribute to grimke and acknowledge this moment. and i, for one, am so very grateful that we are. as a black woman, i know i am certainly -- we all are beneficiaries of her bold action . but what i also know is that moment, the one we honor here today, was a very long time in the making. oath in the personal evolution of grimke -- both in the personal evolution of grimke, for the abolitionists and women's mov
so, each of us is the nail, and each of us can win the battle. thank you. [applause] , thank you. -- >> thank you. [applause] ayanna pressley is boston city council are at large. she is our next speaker. top of the to get the first go round and the top of the ticket in the preliminary elections for boston -- top of the ticket the first go round in the top of the ticket in the preliminary elections for boston. [applause] >> well, good evening. today, we commemorate this is...
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she never told us very much. she's also a senior fellow at harvard center for science international affair, member of defense policy board. cofounded the center for new america securities. a think tank you know. she's a member of the aspen strategy group. the dean leading the graduate school of art and sciences. he started as a child getting to arguments. i love that. [laughter] i'm going put that in my rÉsume. i like that. soon thereafter he became a trial lawyer doing criminal justice and civil rights work. there's so much more here. he was an adviser to secretary of state condolezza rice. he's a member of the president's intelligence advisory board, he for president bush and president obama. he's written a number of books. germany -- i read that one. that was he wrote it with con i did rice. and most importantly a member of the aspen strategy group. which she directed from 2002 to 2003. so i will start by asking both michelle and philip a few questions then open it up to the audience. we are in a transitional
she never told us very much. she's also a senior fellow at harvard center for science international affair, member of defense policy board. cofounded the center for new america securities. a think tank you know. she's a member of the aspen strategy group. the dean leading the graduate school of art and sciences. he started as a child getting to arguments. i love that. [laughter] i'm going put that in my rÉsume. i like that. soon thereafter he became a trial lawyer doing criminal justice and...
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so the examples that you were using, are receiving funding, and the 2005 acta says you can't use those. so can you explain how your logic is on that? >> actually, i think we are regulating and proposing this regulation under the clean air act which is very specific in both its intent as well as its history of application. there is no question that ccs technology is available. exponents at ccs have been in place and demonstrated for decades. so the question really is, is it reasonable in cost and isn't available for this sector? epa believes it is. we have proposed that. we are welcome and open to comments. we will be getting to the public comment process shortly i think through the public comment process using this technology is well known. it's available. is being invested in today and it's going to work and it's going to be a pathway forward for coal into the future. >> to summarize what you said is, one, there's no full-scale power plants operating with this technology today, correct? >> i'm aware of these components being -- >> i didn't say components. but there's no full-scale pow
so the examples that you were using, are receiving funding, and the 2005 acta says you can't use those. so can you explain how your logic is on that? >> actually, i think we are regulating and proposing this regulation under the clean air act which is very specific in both its intent as well as its history of application. there is no question that ccs technology is available. exponents at ccs have been in place and demonstrated for decades. so the question really is, is it reasonable in...
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for those of you were watching, you keep us safe, make us proud, and remind us of our own obligations to build upon the work of predecessors and leave something better for our own kids. on the half of the obama family, i want to wish everyone a very happy thanksgiving. tomorrow we will count ourselves lucky that there is more to be thankful for that we can ever say and more to be hopeful for than we can ever imagine. now, with the power vested in me i want to grant popcorn a full come on -- [laughter] a full reprieve. i wish you well. [laughter] congratulations. [applause] happy thanksgiving, everybody. see you popcorn. [applause] >> so it is popcorn that it the presidential pardon. the president and family will participate in the service project and the washington area. later today, more from our q&a series. toby cost growth from the cleveland clinic will talk about the ongoing debate over health care. here is a preview. -- toby cosgrove. >> i think what we have to understand it is -- is what is going on in health care across the country. we have ourselves in a situation where we kne
for those of you were watching, you keep us safe, make us proud, and remind us of our own obligations to build upon the work of predecessors and leave something better for our own kids. on the half of the obama family, i want to wish everyone a very happy thanksgiving. tomorrow we will count ourselves lucky that there is more to be thankful for that we can ever say and more to be hopeful for than we can ever imagine. now, with the power vested in me i want to grant popcorn a full come on --...
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as it is being used today. we looked at it as something that would target a single person for something. that is another thing that is happening. if you take the program and work it backwards a bit to 9/11, if we had had the opportunity at 9/11 to collate telephone messages, public addresses and frequent flyer numbers, none of which is constitutionally protected we would have had the possibility of discovering all 19 hijackers in the united states. i am not telling you we would have prevented 9/11 from happening because if we had we would have discovered all of them here and we would have been following them and watching them and saw them get on the airplanes, 99% certain that what would have happened is the fbi agents who were following them would have noted the plane they got on, where they were going and called san diego field office and told them to pick them up when they arrived. my point is you can get this information from valuable information of constitutionally and protected. the thing you have to ask
as it is being used today. we looked at it as something that would target a single person for something. that is another thing that is happening. if you take the program and work it backwards a bit to 9/11, if we had had the opportunity at 9/11 to collate telephone messages, public addresses and frequent flyer numbers, none of which is constitutionally protected we would have had the possibility of discovering all 19 hijackers in the united states. i am not telling you we would have prevented...
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thank you for joining us. i want to thank those who joined us online and sent in their questions. those who join us online and did not sin in their questions, and all of you, for being such a good audience. in thek will be for sale back of the asia store and they will be signing those books as well. thank you all for coming. [applause] >> thanksgiving, the producer president traditionally orrdoned a turkey two. that will happen at 1:20 eastern life here on c-span. later today, more from our q&a series. tobytoby crawls grow -- cosgrove. here's a preview. >> what do you think? >> i think what we have to understand is what is going on in health care across the country. we have gotten ourselves in the situation where we knew we had to change health care. health care has become so expensive in the united states. it is now consuming 18% of the gdp. it is starting to eat into things like education and other social programs that we want to have and need to have. and we are more expensive than any other country in the world. harness thato inflation rate. we have to control it and bring the
thank you for joining us. i want to thank those who joined us online and sent in their questions. those who join us online and did not sin in their questions, and all of you, for being such a good audience. in thek will be for sale back of the asia store and they will be signing those books as well. thank you all for coming. [applause] >> thanksgiving, the producer president traditionally orrdoned a turkey two. that will happen at 1:20 eastern life here on c-span. later today, more from...
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a colleague of mine used to say you have a defense department on steroids. at least it used to be. defense department on steroids and state and aide on life support. you get the -- you may have a beautifully inte dwraited plan at conception. when it goes up the hill to be resourced and you get a third of the resources you asked for on the civilian side and 110% of the resources on the military side. it doesn't look so integrated or coherent anymore. on a hallow force, i think there's a lot that kneads to -- needs to be done in the defense reform domain. taking down the 20% of infrastructure that our military leaders don't think they need anymore. .. that same force because of unsustainable personnel costs cost twice as much as it did 10 years ago. we cannot stay on that trajectory. so that's the first place i would go to battle a hollow force. >> a lightning round. we have bill, ambassador and marvin kalb. in that order. >> just quickly. philip, i wanted to pursue your historical analogy. you mentioned the '20s and '50s as positive elements. analy you can find negative ones astid w
a colleague of mine used to say you have a defense department on steroids. at least it used to be. defense department on steroids and state and aide on life support. you get the -- you may have a beautifully inte dwraited plan at conception. when it goes up the hill to be resourced and you get a third of the resources you asked for on the civilian side and 110% of the resources on the military side. it doesn't look so integrated or coherent anymore. on a hallow force, i think there's a lot that...
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they made us better. they made us more competitive. and the wide reaction of the japanese wasn't protectionism, it was learning to be have a more competitive auto industry. learning to be -- >> i think may actually to talk about situations that are hypothetical than the case -- i think it's not very productive. perhaps the a-- let consider china for a moment. we have an interesting case that flips on the questions that you are questioning. that is microsoft in china. we know that microsoft is cooperating with the chinese government. they have provided various forms of help to the chinese security establishment in order to, for instance, listen and to skype conversations. it's well known that the chinese government is good at intercepting special key words on social media. it was american products. the government that is able to get help from an american company highly different context. the only pressure point is not the legal. not a legal one. purely commercial. it raises fundamental ethical questions that i'm sure. ethical questions
they made us better. they made us more competitive. and the wide reaction of the japanese wasn't protectionism, it was learning to be have a more competitive auto industry. learning to be -- >> i think may actually to talk about situations that are hypothetical than the case -- i think it's not very productive. perhaps the a-- let consider china for a moment. we have an interesting case that flips on the questions that you are questioning. that is microsoft in china. we know that...
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we're using research funds to try to prove this up you're using it as an example adequately demonstrated. it doesn't make sense. >> we are coordinating closely with d.o.e. and if you have listened and heard from the d.o.e. folks today, you will know they share our opinion about its availability and been demonstrated. it's exciting to think that we could make it more cost-effective moving forward, and that you could expand the range of sequestration opportunities. so they are actually working very hard with the industry to continue to move that technology forward. that is only good news, sir. that's not bad news. >> but we still don't know whether it's adequately demonstrated. >> gentleman's time is expired. pursuant to the discussion about the efficiency of the -- relating to the subpoena. i ask unanimous con stoant enter to the record a letter from the texas commission on environmental quality they received last week that makes clear, quote, that the data provided to date lacks critical information. er appreciate your being here and appreciate your patience. we've heard described on thi
we're using research funds to try to prove this up you're using it as an example adequately demonstrated. it doesn't make sense. >> we are coordinating closely with d.o.e. and if you have listened and heard from the d.o.e. folks today, you will know they share our opinion about its availability and been demonstrated. it's exciting to think that we could make it more cost-effective moving forward, and that you could expand the range of sequestration opportunities. so they are actually...
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it's great for the three of us to be here. we feel so grateful from when we .ame this project would not have and if we have intrigued you, if you cannot nieman this url go to labs and find the link. i don't think they scared you too much with the word count you don't have to read it all. you can watch some of the video. if you let these people speak for themselves, you will be engaged and you will learn. the truth is in the 60-something interviews if you're having insomnia trouble, there are some that will put you to sleep. i will not trail you -- i will not tell you which ones those are. group three here are not of that. >> they are exempted. pessimistic discussion and we are not pessimistic about the future of news. we certainly look back and we true, wetruism most agreed on a few things. don't be nostalgic. truth is that there are 70,000 other articles in that journalism was not always great. flaws, manyany incorrect stories. many stories that were just not covered at all and not enough diversity. it is one thing we encount
it's great for the three of us to be here. we feel so grateful from when we .ame this project would not have and if we have intrigued you, if you cannot nieman this url go to labs and find the link. i don't think they scared you too much with the word count you don't have to read it all. you can watch some of the video. if you let these people speak for themselves, you will be engaged and you will learn. the truth is in the 60-something interviews if you're having insomnia trouble, there are...
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Nov 27, 2013
11/13
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we welcome those who join us on heritage.org, those of you joining us on c-span today and in the future. we remind all of our internet viewers that comments or questions can be sent to us at any time by e-mailing speaker@ heritage.org. we will post it on the website for everyone's future reference as well. ,osting the discussion today director of the douglas and sarah allison center for foreign-policy studies and previously served as senior research fellow for defense and homeland security. he is well-versed in cybersecurity as well as defense for civil authority serving for three decades in army special forces and he continued at the pentagon as deputy secretary of american security affairs. prior to joining us here, he was a lead consultant at ibm on cyber security policy and he is an adjunct professor at george mason university and an associate professor of terrorism studies and cybersecurity at long island. please welcome me in joining dr. steve bucci. [applause] welcome todd my everyone here and coming on to c-span. i have to tell you we seldom get right on anf this event. this was
we welcome those who join us on heritage.org, those of you joining us on c-span today and in the future. we remind all of our internet viewers that comments or questions can be sent to us at any time by e-mailing speaker@ heritage.org. we will post it on the website for everyone's future reference as well. ,osting the discussion today director of the douglas and sarah allison center for foreign-policy studies and previously served as senior research fellow for defense and homeland security. he...
122
122
Nov 27, 2013
11/13
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here now using. that was the most challenging skill for us at the time. it was getting the engineers at the time. we are thinking about the product that we are creating. we do not talk much about new product development, but we were in the middle of looking -- why should we be offering "the new york times?" that is the working title. into the younger audience with a point made earlier in the conversation, giving a different experience. we have two people from traditional sales. because itengineered is going to have to be a different experience and it is going to have to be a effort experience across dividers. that is where i think we probably missed the beat. journalists -- it is not training. it is hiring and training. the journalists on the web are the ones who are now able to ingrained -- to have video. to become part of that experience. some have been doing it well for a long time. that.d more of we have doubled the video amount , the amount of video in the last six months time. we are all doing
here now using. that was the most challenging skill for us at the time. it was getting the engineers at the time. we are thinking about the product that we are creating. we do not talk much about new product development, but we were in the middle of looking -- why should we be offering "the new york times?" that is the working title. into the younger audience with a point made earlier in the conversation, giving a different experience. we have two people from traditional sales....